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Leading fund manager accuses Albanese govt of ‘gaslighting' Aussie taxpayers over its contested unrealised gains tax proposal
Leading fund manager accuses Albanese govt of ‘gaslighting' Aussie taxpayers over its contested unrealised gains tax proposal

Sky News AU

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Sky News AU

Leading fund manager accuses Albanese govt of ‘gaslighting' Aussie taxpayers over its contested unrealised gains tax proposal

A leading fund manager has accused the Albanese government of 'gaslighting' the Australian people by claiming only 80,000 people would be affected by its unrealised capital gains tax proposal. The Albanese government's proposal to double the tax rate to 30 per cent on funds in super accounts above $3 million has sparked fears for small business owners, farmers who hold properties in their self-managed super funds, and startup investors, who use SMSF's as an investment vehicle. Treasurer Jim Chalmers has claimed the tax would initially only hit 80,000 Australians, which even Assistant Treasurer Daniel Mulino conceded was not true, estimating about 1.2 million, or 10 per cent of taxpayers, will pay the tax within 30 years. However, Wilson Asset Management founder Geoff Wilson said he believes in 30 years' time more than half the workforce would be paying this tax on unrealised gains, predicting about 8.1 million Australians will be paying tax on 'imaginary gains' by 2055. 'Albanese and Chalmers are gaslighting the Australian people by saying it's only 80,000 people,' he told Mr Wilson said having to pay tax on profits you may never make seemed 'immoral'. 'Chalmers is so desperate to get it through and won't see logical sense - either he has a death wish and doesn't want to stay as treasurer or he wants to use division 296 tax for housing and other investment shares,' Mr Wilson said. He said the Albanese government had 'made all these promises and someone's gotta fund it', adding the tax was 'illogical' and 'badly thought out'. It came after Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary Sally McManus told Channel 9 the tax on unrealised capital gains on super balances above $3 million had 'got to be indexed' to ensure more people 'don't end up' falling into the bracket. 'But that's a very long time in the future,' she said. Newly appointed Shadow Finance Minister James Paterson said the policy was 'wrong in principle' and the Coalition would 'fight this every step." 'Unless the government was willing to walk away from the two key principles in this bill, which is taxing unrealised gains and failing to index the threshold, then there's no conceivable world in which we could support it,' Mr Paterson told Sky News on Tuesday.

Wealthy baby boomer's infuriating question about how Anthony Albanese's new tax will affect his $8MILLION in superannuation
Wealthy baby boomer's infuriating question about how Anthony Albanese's new tax will affect his $8MILLION in superannuation

Daily Mail​

time25-06-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Wealthy baby boomer's infuriating question about how Anthony Albanese's new tax will affect his $8MILLION in superannuation

A retiree with an $8million superannuation balance he shares with his wife has publicly asked how to arrange his finances to avoid Labor's proposed super tax hike. Under Labor's tax plan, Australians with more than $3million in super will pay an additional 15 per cent tax on the portion of their earnings above $3m. Given only an estimated 80,000 Australians have super balances above the $3m threshold, the new tax would currently affect about 0.05 per cent of the population. The limited scope and applicability of the tax hike hasn't stopped the country's top-earners from scrambling for advice on how best to shield their account balances. Enter the anonymous boomer who recently asked Sydney Morning Herald columnist Noel Whittaker whether his $8million Self Managed Super Fund (SMSF), through some eleventh-hour readjustments, could be spared the additional tax. The frugal fellow explained the facts as follows: the man, aged in his mid-to-late 80's shares the SMSF with his wife, with 58 per cent allocated to his account and 42 per cent to his wife's. In the 2025/26 financial year, they will both draw the minimum pension of nine per cent, totalling about $333,000. His first question to Mr Whittaker was: if they sold enough assets to bring the balance below $6million by June 30 next year, would they be exempt from the new tax? The answer: it depends. The tax is calculated per member, meaning if a single account held more than half the $6million balance, that account would be liable, he said. Assuming the pensioner reduced his personal super account to $3million on which he earned $400,000 over the next financial year, Mr Whittaker estimated the extra tax would cost him only $7056. His second question, which answered in the affirmative, concerned whether pension withdrawals affected the relevant balance for tax purposes. Mr Whittaker clarified that the tax only applies to the portion of a super balance over $3million. So, in his example, a balance of $3.4million would be liable to pay $7056 in tax. According to ATO data, the average Australian man has a super balance of $182,000 while the average woman has $146,000. Calculations by the Australia Institute estimate 97 per cent of Australians currently in the workforce will never have $3million in superannuation let alone the roughly $4.64million held personally by the boomer in question. Sympathies, then, were understandably in short supply among readers of the article. 'Accumulation of huge wealth with huge tax concessions and still not wanting to pay a fair share to fund a more equitable society doesn't seem right,' one user wrote. '$8millilon and they're whingeing abut paying just a little extra tax,' another user said. Another reader wrote: '$8million in super... far out! That is more than enough for two people to retire on. 'Super IS NOT an inheritance vehicle to ensure wealth is passed down the generations whilst paying the least amount of tax.' While few sympathise with the efforts of Australia's wealthiest to avoid the new tax rate, others have called out the fact the $3million threshold is not indexed to inflation. It's a position shared by the Greens, who Labor will likely have to rely on to secure the bill's passage through parliament given the Coalition's stated opposition. Economists estimate that, by 2040, a $3million threshold would be worth about $2million in today's dollars, meaning more Aussies will creep into the affected bracket. AMP economist Diana Mousina has been outspoken in her criticism of the decision not to index the bill, claiming it would eventually affect a wide swathe of earners. While the figures are widely contested, Ms Mousina calculated the average 22-year-old earning average wages for life would eventually reach the $3million threshold. 'Do you think that the proposed $3million superannuation cap tax won't impact you because the Labor government said it only impacts 0.5 per cent of people now? Think again,' she said.

How rentvesting helps young buyers enter property market
How rentvesting helps young buyers enter property market

Daily Telegraph

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Telegraph

How rentvesting helps young buyers enter property market

Millennials and Zoomers are tearing up the homeownership playbook, ditching the quarter-acre block in favour of something smarter — and far more flexible. Rentvesting, once a fringe strategy, is now going mainstream as more first-home buyers realise they can't afford to live where they want to buy. M R Advocacy director and buyers advocate Madeleine Roberts said the shift was being driven by affordability pressures and a sharper understanding of wealth-building. RELATED: Revealed: Bodybuilder's secret $7m+ Melb hide-out Vic bidding ban nears as tenants priced out Named: Cheapest Melb suburbs to buy home 'There's been a clear uptick in younger buyers choosing rentvesting, and it's largely out of necessity,' Ms Roberts said. 'Most entry-level buyers are priced out of the areas they actually want to live inm suburbs where the median house price is well above $1m.' Instead, they're renting in lifestyle-rich areas and buying investment properties in suburbs with better growth potential. 'They're arming themselves with the right information and realising rentvesting is a smart way to build wealth without giving up lifestyle,' she said. The M R Advocacy director said the strategy is especially popular among clients using self-managed super funds (SMSFs), with some choosing to buy property inside super for long-term gain. 'A lot of people are drawn to the idea of being in control of their financial destiny rather than relying on a fund manager,' Ms Roberts said. 'But the risks are real if you don't have the right strategy. 'Whether it's property or super, you can't just wing it.' OpenCorp chief executive Cam McLellan said the most successful investors were combining strategies and staying flexible. 'You don't have to choose super or property,' Mr McLellan said. 'Smart investors are doing both. That's how you future-proof, multiple levers working together,' Mr McLellan said. Mr McLellan said younger buyers often underestimated their potential. 'Too many buyers chase the wrong thing, it's not about the biggest house, it's about buying the best-performing asset and using your cashflow wisely.' Super Members Council chief executive Misha Schubert said super shouldn't be overlooked in long-term plans. 'Super is one of the most powerful long-term tools Australians have, but it's underused and under-understood by younger people,' Ms Schubert said. She added that super could complement newer strategies like rentvesting. 'Rentvesting shows how young Australians are finding smart ways to balance lifestyle and wealth creation. 'Super can play a part in that too, especially with voluntary contributions and tax-effective savings.' Even as buyers rewrite the rules Ms Roberts said flexibility, information and strategy are the new pillars of the new Great Australian Dream. 'We're heading in that direction,' Ms Roberts said. 'Property is more expensive, but people still want to participate in the market and rentvesting gives them a way to do that without giving up on lifestyle.' 'It's adaptable, it's flexible, and it's increasingly popular with younger Australians trying to get ahead.' Sign up to the Herald Sun Weekly Real Estate Update. Click here to get the latest Victorian property market news delivered direct to your inbox. MORE: Developer's bold plan for $50m Melbourne site What sold this hero cop's family home Melb buyers heat up market in cold snap

Treasurer Jim Chalmers 'pouring cold water on investment' with Labor's proposed unrealised gains tax, Geoff Wilson warns
Treasurer Jim Chalmers 'pouring cold water on investment' with Labor's proposed unrealised gains tax, Geoff Wilson warns

Sky News AU

time19-06-2025

  • Business
  • Sky News AU

Treasurer Jim Chalmers 'pouring cold water on investment' with Labor's proposed unrealised gains tax, Geoff Wilson warns

Treasurer Jim Chalmers is 'pouring cold water on investment' and 'penalising' Australians taking on financial risk through Labor's proposed changes to superannuation accounts above $3m, a leading fund manager has warned. Mr Chalmers on Wednesday vowed a boost to Australia's productivity and deliver major tax reform in a speech to the National Press Club. His promise drew criticism from Wilson Asset Management founder Geoff Wilson, who lambasted Labor's plans to alter how large superannuation funds are taxed - which includes targeting unrealised capital gains. "You can't say the economy lacks dynamism and innovation, then introduce a tax that penalises long-term investment and risk-taking,' Mr Wilson told 'Taxing unrealised gains in superannuation does the opposite of what's needed — it punishes prudence, discourages capital formation and undermines confidence in the rules of the game. 'The Treasurer admits we need more innovation — while taxing the very gains that fund it. 'You can't light a fire under the economy by pouring cold water on investment." A common criticism of the plan to tax unrealised gains on assets – including properties and shares – above the threshold in super funds is the impact it will have on small businesses. Many small business owners put assets in their self-managed super funds (SMSF), but under Labor's plan those above the threshold would be forced to pay tax on paper gains. Similarly, some investors use their SMSF as a low tax investment vehicle for startup businesses. Wilson Asset Management sent a note to shareholders warning if the tax were applied to a company like US$40b design platform Canva, which achieved its massive valuation after 18 funding rounds, the company would have failed. 'Under taxing of unrealised gains every funding round would require tax to be paid on a hypothetical valuation,' the report reads. 'Most startups operate with negative cashflow and when capital is raised it is to fund growth, not to provide liquidity to investors. 'Therefore, there is no liquidity to pay tax on an unrealised gain.' Labor's changes to super accounts $3m will also not be indexed and capture more and more Australians over time. AMP's chief economist Shane Oliver said the lack of indexing across the tax system, including under Labor's proposed super tax changes, was something the government needed to change. 'We should be looking at removing areas where, as far as possible, we're not indexing,' Mr Oliver told 'The ideal should be indexing things, not leaving more parts of the tax system unindexed and at the behest of what future governments might do.' The government insists its super change affects only the top 0.5 per cent of accounts, however, modelling from AMP deputy chief economist Diana Mousina suggests otherwise. 'An average 22-year-old today, who's earning average full-time earnings, will hit the cap when they get to about 62 years old on my analysis,' Ms Mousina told Sky News. 'So that's before they actually reach retirement.' She warned the government's failure to index the $3 million cap means growing numbers of Australians will eventually be drawn into the tax net. 'My estimates were actually, I think, understating the amount of people that will hit the cap because I used quite low return assumptions,' Ms Mousina said. She also flagged broader economic distortions that may result from the policy as people try to find a way around the taxes. 'If people know that their super is going to be hit, then inheritances will go elsewhere,' she said. 'More people will probably go to purchase a home, which has implications for home prices in the future. 'So people will find a way around this system to try and reduce their taxable income as much as possible.'

Labor left with ‘no choice' but to force super tax after weak GDP figures in March, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien declares
Labor left with ‘no choice' but to force super tax after weak GDP figures in March, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien declares

Sky News AU

time07-06-2025

  • Business
  • Sky News AU

Labor left with ‘no choice' but to force super tax after weak GDP figures in March, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien declares

Labor has been left with 'no choice' but to go after citizens' earnings with its proposed super tax as slow growth plagues the nation and hurts tax revenue, shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien has declared. Join to watch the full interview with Ted O'Brien on Business Weekend at 11am (AEST). The Albanese government's proposal to double the tax rate on funds in super balances above $3m and target unrealised gains could soon be legislated as the Greens' approval is all the bill needs to go through the Senate. It comes as recent GDP figures showed Australia was headed back towards per capita recession territory with growth slumping to just 0.2 per cent in the March quarter. The super tax proposal has faced fierce backlash from the Opposition, economists and leaders in the business community. Mr O'Brien is among those and tore into the Albanese government's fiscal management on Sky News' Business Weekend. 'The only reason they're doing it is they've lost all discipline on fiscal responsibility,' the shadow treasurer said. 'Debt (and) deficits (are) going out of control and they've got no ambition for the Australian economy.' He criticised Treasurer Jim Chalmers who lauded the 0.2 per cent growth, arguing the uncertainty from Donald Trump's trade war meant any growth was a decent outcome. 'We heard it last week from the Treasurer after the national accounts came out. What, 0.2 per cent growth in the quarter? Seriously? Lower than last time!' Mr O'Brien said. 'At a yearly basis it's running at less than half of the long-run average of growth and the Treasurer is happy about that. '(There is) no ambition for growth of the Australian economy and when you have no ambition and you overspend, you have no choice but to go after the earnings, the money of your own citizens. 'That's what this super tax does.' Labor's plan to tax unrealised capital gains has drawn backlash from Aussies concerned about small businesses, farmers and startups as many put assets in their self-managed super funds or use it as a low tax investment vehicle. Wilson Asset Management founder Geoff Wilson said by forcing Aussies to pay taxes on paper gains it will hinder investment in Australia. 'Both Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers - and probably most of the government - are gaslighting the Australian people by saying: 'Look, this will only impact a very small percentage of people that pay the additional tax',' Mr Wilson told Sky News. 'That's correct, but what it'll do is actually impact about how $4.2 trillion in superannuation is invested. 'We anticipate that the money will come out of self-managed super funds (SMSF), which is about $1.1 trillion, and billions of that will go into the housing market and push house prices up . ' He cautioned Aussies who use their SMSF as a low tax investment vehicle will be discouraged from funding projects and businesses in the Australian market. 'People won't want to take risk on their superannuation in the self-managed super funds,' Mr Wilson said. 'The angel investors and the startups and the small companies in Australia that find it hard to raise capital, particularly at this point in time - that tap's going to be turned off.'

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